The ocean covers 70% of our planet. The deep-sea floor is a realm that is largely unexplored, but cutting-edge technology is enabling a new generation of aquanauts to go deeper than ever before.
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Beneath the waves is a mysterious world that takes up to 95% of Earth's living space. Only three people have ever reached the bottom of the deepest part of the ocean. The deep is a world without sunlight, of freezing temperatures, and immense pressure. It's remained largely unexplored until now.
Cutting-edge technology is enabling a new generation of aquanauts to explore deeper than ever before. They are opening up a whole new world of potential benefits to humanity. The risks are great, but the rewards could be greater. From a vast wealth of resources to clues about the origins of life, the race is on to the final frontier
The Okeanos Explorer, the American government state-of-the-art vessel, designed for every type of deep ocean exploration from discovering new species to investigating shipwrecks. On board, engineers and scientists come together to answer questions about the origins of life and human history.
Today the Okeanos is on a mission to investigate the wreck of a World War one submarine. Engineer Bobby Moore is part of a team who has developed the technology for this type of mission.
The “deep discover”, a remote operating vehicle is equipped with 20 powerful LED lights and designed to withstand the huge pressure four miles down. Equivalent to 50 jumbo jets stacked on top of a person
While the crew of the Okeanos send robots to investigate the deep, some of their fellow scientists prefer a more hands-on approach. Doctor Greg stone is a world leading marine biologist with over 8,000 hours under the sea. He has been exploring the abyss in person for 30 years.
The technology opening up the deep is also opening up opportunity. Not just to witness the diversity of life but to glimpse vast amounts of rare mineral resources. Some of the world's most valuable metals can be found deep under the waves. A discovery that has begun to pique the interest of the global mining industry.
The boldest of mining companies are heading to the deep drawn by the allure of a new Gold Rush. But to exploit it they're also beating a path to another strange new world. In an industrial estate in the north of England, SMD is one of the world's leading manufacturers of remote underwater equipment. The industrial technology the company has developed has made mining possible several kilometers beneath the ocean surface.
With an estimated 150 trillion dollars’ worth of gold alone, deep-sea mining has the potential to transform the global economy.
With so much still to discover, mining in the deep ocean could have unknowable impact. It's not just life today that may need protecting; reaching the deep ocean might just allow researchers to answer some truly fundamental questions. Hydrothermal vents, hot springs on the ocean floor, are cracks in the Earth's crust. Some claim they could help scientists glimpse the origins of life itself.
We might still be years away from unlocking the mysteries of the deep. Even with the latest technology, this kind of exploration is always challenging. As the crew of the Okeanos comes to terms with a scale of the challenge and the opportunity that lies beneath, what they and others discover could transform humanity's understanding of how to protect the ocean.
It's the most hostile environment on earth, but the keys to our future may lie in the deep.
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Living on the Ocean Floor - footage recorded by Vincent Zintzen, Te Papa Fish Team, Natural Environment.
Film recorded using a baited Lander in various locations and depths around NZ.
The video unit lights up the dark world of the deep sea. Food is scarce so the animals that live in the depths are attracted to the bait. The camera reveals the interesting behaviour of these creatures as they strive to survive in their extreme environment
The footage of the seal shark attacking the hagfish, and getting a mouthful of slime for his troubles, is a good example of the knowledge gained through this difficult and exacting research.
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No one really knows what’s in the deep ocean in Antarctica. Now we have the technology to reach into the ocean depths, we accompanied scientist and deep-sea explorer Jon Copley and became the first to descend to 1000 meters underwater in Antarctica for Blue Planet II. The exotic creatures we found there will astonish you.
This video is a part of Our Blue Planet, a joint venture between Alucia Productions and BBC Earth to get people talking about the ocean. Join the conversation on Twitter: @OurBluePlanet.
Director: Mark Dalio
Director of Photography (AP): Janssen Powers
Director of Photography (BBC): Ted Giffords
2nd Camera/Drone Op: James DuBourdieu
Field Audio: Mike Kasic
Production Manager: Samantha Loshiavo
Associate Producer: Marjorie Crowley
Editors: Ryan Quinn, Brian Golding, Janssen Powers
Colorist: James DuBourdieu
Sound Re-recording Mixer: Ryan Quinn
Assistant Editor: Jorge Alvarez
Post Production Supervisor: Brian Golding
Executive Producer: Jennifer Hile

Deep Ocean: Series 1
Once you pass 1,000 meters, the water is completely devoid of light, and you have reached the deep ocean. Down here, temperatures plummet to 39 degrees Fahrenheit, and constantly stay near freezing. The pressures at these depths range from about 40 to over 110 times the pressure of Earth’s atmosphere. We know more about outer space than the ocean floor. Want to learn more about the ocean? Start with this mind-blowing series! , narrated by … David Attenborough
NHK - Deep Ocean: Series 1 (2016)Part 1: The Lost World Of The Pacific
The same submarine which successfully captured the world’s first moving images of a giant squid in its natural habitat is used for exploring the deep sea cliffs off the coast of New Guinea. The team encounters true living fossil species one after another. Join this exciting deep sea adventure!

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The Mariana Trench is located near the Mariana Islands in the Western Pacific Ocean and is labelled as the deepest section in the earth's seabed, stretching approximately 2,550 kilometres (1,580 mi) long and has an average width of around 69 kilometres (43 mi). There have only been two manned descents to the very bottom nearly 7 miles deep of pure darkness. Not only is it a fascinating place and wonder of the planet, but it's also shrouded in mystery. Since so few have been down there, and only a hand full of cameras have recorded the bottom, what creatures live at the bottom is one of life's mysterious. Sit back and enjoy this short documentary of the Marian Trench in all its glory and mystery.
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Deep Sea Creatures [National Geographic Documentary 2017 HD]
The Deep sea creature refers to organisms that live below the photic zone of the ocean. These creatures must survive in extremely harsh conditions, such as hundreds of bars of pressure, small amounts of oxygen, very little food, no sunlight, and constant, extreme cold. Most creatures have to depend on food floating down from above.
These creatures live in very demanding environments, such as the abyssal or hadal zones, which, being thousands of meters below the surface, are almost completely devoid of light. The water is between 3 and 10 degrees Celsius and has low oxygen levels. Due to the depth, the pressure is between 20 and 1,000 bars. Creatures that live hundreds or even thousands of meters deep in the ocean have adapted to the high pressure, lack of light, and other factors.
The depths of the ocean are festooned with the most nightmarish creatures imaginable. You might think you’re safe, because these critters live thousands of feet down in a cold dark abyss, but the vampire squid, which looks like a nightmare umbrella, and the frilled shark—a literal living fossil—will live on in the recesses of your mind long after you’ve clicked away. Enjoy these deep sea horrors and try to have a relaxing day afterward.
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Just how deep does the ocean go? Way further than you think. This animation puts the actual distance into perspective, showing a vast distance between the waves we see and the mysterious point we call Challenger Deep.
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5 mysterious things found underwater that can't be explained...
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Dark5 presents 5 mysterious objects and scientific anomalies detected in the deep sea that have yet to be explained... including what looks like a secret underwater base off the coast of Malibu, California, an unidentified object found deep in the Baltic Sea, strange holes in the ice of Lake Baikal, a magnetic disturbance under Wilkes Land in Antarctica, and unexplained lifeforms in the frozen waters of Lake Vostok.

Measuring the Greatest Ocean Depth
The Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench is the deepest known point in Earth's oceans. In 2010 the United States Center for Coastal & Ocean Mapping measured the depth of the Challenger Deep at 10,994 meters (36,070 feet) below sea level with an estimated vertical accuracy of ± 40 meters. If Mount Everest, the highest mountain on Earth, were placed at this location it would be covered by over one mile of water.
The first depth measurements in the Mariana Trench were made by the British survey ship HMS Challenger, which was used by the Royal Navy in 1875 to conduct research in the trench. The greatest depth that they recorded at that time was 8,184 meters (26,850 feet).
In 1951, another Royal Navy vessel, also named the "HMS Challenger," returned to the area for additional measurements. They discovered an even deeper location with a depth of 10,900 meters (35,760 feet) determined by echo sounding. The Challenger Deep was named after the Royal Navy vessel that made these measurements.
In 2009, sonar mapping done by researchers aboard the RV Kilo Moana, operated by the University of Hawaii, determined the depth to be 10,971 meters (35,994 feet) with a potential error of ± 22 meters. The most recent measurement, done in 2010, is the 10,994 meter ( ± 40 meter accuracy) depth reported at the top of this article, measured by the United States Center for Coastal & Ocean Mapping.

Welcome to Top10Archive! The horrifying depths of the ocean remains vastly unexplored. It seems the deeper down we submerge, the scarier and more horrifying the creatures that live therein are. From the giant squid, once thought to be nothing more than a myth, to bone eating worms, we bring you our picks for the top 10 creepiest sea creatures you didn't know existed!
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10. Sarcastic Fringehead
9. Frilled Shark
8. Giant Squid
7. Oarfish
6. Barreleye
5. Chimaera
4. Zombie Worms (Osedax)
3. Giant Isopod
2. Tardigrades
1. Bobbit Worm
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A whopping 94% of all life-forms on Earth are aquatic. Such a huge number of living beings who can't survive without water is understandable. After all, more than 70% of our planet's surface is covered with water. The World Ocean includes the Pacific Ocean, the Atlantic Ocean, the Indian Ocean, and the Arctic Ocean. There's enough water in the oceans to fill a 685-mile-long bathtub! One of the main nagging questions people have been asking for ages is "How deep is the ocean in reality?" Let’s find an answer to it.
TIMESTAMPS
Sunlit zone 1:21
Twilight zone 6:17
Midnight zone 10:19
The abyss 13:17
Trench zone 14:25
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SUMMARY
-The Sunlit zone stretches from 14.5 ft, that is is the depth of a standard Olympic diving pool, to 561 ft under the water’s surface, where RMS Carpathia found her last dwelling. This ship became famous after her participation in the rescue of the Titanic survivors.
-At 656 ft, the twilight zone begins. That's where you can see the giant oarfish. At a depth of 1,453 ft, you could reach the height of the Empire State Building if somebody powerful enough decided to submerge it under the water. The giant squid lives as deep as 2,952 ft below the surface. This is where the Twilight zone ends.
-At a depth of 3,608 ft, there's the deepest volcano recorded by scientists. At 12,795 ft below the water’s surface, there are Air France flight 447 black boxes. Airbus A330 crashed into the Atlantic Ocean in 2009. This is where the Midnight zone ends.
-At a depth of 13,123 ft, the midnight zone ends, and the abyss lies ahead. 18,897 ft is the bottom of the abyss and the depth at which you can find the deepest shipwreck. SS Rio Grande sunk in 1941 in the South Atlantic and was discovered only in 1996.
-At a depth of 19,685 ft, the abyss ends and gives way to the trench zone. At a depth of 36,070 ft, you will reach the very bottom of the ocean in its deepest point known to man: Challenger Deep.
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If there is one thing on this planet that is incredibly yet holds many mysteries, its the ocean and since most of it's never fully been explored, there are places down there that have creatures that have never been discovered. Who knows what they could be. The imagination can run wild, but looking at some creatures that have recently been discovered due to our increasing technology the ocean has shown us that the possibilities are endless.
Here are five sea creatures that rank as some of the most extraordinary creatures in the ocean. From the prehistoric frilled shark, to a giant squid that was found thousands of feet deep.
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The ocean is without doubt the most fascinating place on this planet. This quote pretty much sums it up.... "Earth Should be Named Planet Ocean, Not Planet Earth". That couldn't be more true. We are surrounded by ocean, yet for the most part, we have no idea what creatures are sharing the planet with us. In this video you will see five truly awesome underwater creatures that prove the ocean has far more to offer than what we think. So, from an enormous deep sea shark, to a mysterious alien like creature that was washed up on a beach. Sit back & enjoy this video!
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Sylvia Earle and crew dive to the bottom of the ocean, and capture a new discovery on camera.
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The ocean is vast and full of things we as humans have yet to discover. Put on your scuba suits, this one’s one’s going to be quite the ride. Hopefully, strange noises, odd creatures, and mysterious structures don’t scare you.
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5. Colossal Squid
Remember that small vampire squid? Yeah, take that and then make it like a million times bigger. Okay, not a million, but from this picture of one dried up on the shore, you understand. No to be confused with the giant squid, the colossal squid differs in that their tentacles have little hooks on them. They’re similar in length, though colossal squid are said to be stouter and heavier. These rare and terrifying creatures are a result of a phenomenon that is known as abyssal gigantism, where invertebrates in the deep sea are much larger in size so as to adapt to the smaller portions of food sources. Colossal squid have been seen to grow up to 46 ft long, weighing up to 1,650 pounds. Also, their eyes are said to be the biggest in the whole of the animal kingdom, their eyeballs measuring up to 11 inches in diameter.
4. USS Saratoga
Admittedly, this photo looks terrifying, though do not be alarmed too much by the sight of it. What you see before you is the anchor hawse hole that was once part of the USS Saratoga. This gigantic artifact was discovered in the Bikini Atoll in Micronesia, were many a seacraft have met their demise. The anchor hawse hole has been sunken in the water for so long that it was naturally taken over by the aquatic environment, turning into something that is initially unrecognizable.
3. Mariana Trench Mystery Shark
Oh, so you thought that that great white shark cannibal was the most of your worries as far as sharks go? Well think again, because something even more mysterious than that 16 foot shark eating shark is the Mariana Trench Mystery Shark. Footage of this elusive shark was apparently captured by marine biologists from Japan. The footage was concluded to have been taken from Suruga Bay in Japan. To give you some context, here’s how an average person measures up to more common sharks. And that biggest one is the mystery shark. There’s even been speculation that this shark may in fact be a megalodon, a species that’s said to have been extinct for millions of years.
2. The Bloop
It might not be the most epic or mysterious sounding of titles, but its nomenclature doesn’t make it any less intriguing once you hear what The Bloop is. In the year 1997, a bloop, or low frequency underwater sound was detected in the south Pacific Ocean by the United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The sound was said to be powerful, at and was at first likened to the sound icequakes that take place in icebergs make. About 5 years later, it was then said to be more similar to a marine animal--though this was again disputed and the ice theory was considered to be conclusive. But within the scramble to figure out what the sound was, there were people saying perhaps == was real after all.
Underwater Waterfall
This is definitely a real picture of a real place--not something out of a fantasy land. This is the underwater waterfall located in the Denmark Strait. It is the largest underwater waterfall in the world, and is also known as the Denmark Strait Cataract or the North Atlantic Circulation Pump. It can be found on the western side of the strait located in the Atlantic Ocean and is quite the sight to see indeed. It’s as if the earth was opened and is swallowing the surface world whole--which is a nice thought. The waterfall measures up to 11,500 ft deep and was formed due to varying temperatures between the eastern and western water masses. The flow rate is over 175 million cubic ft per second and is said to be the most voluminous water fall in the world.

At the bottom of the Pacific deep sea, a diving robot has discovered a series of mysterious tracks that cannot be explained geologically.
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The deep sea is the largest habitat on the planet, taking up to 95% of the earth’s living space. Yet, the deep sea also the most unexplored environment, despite being one of the most amazing places on the planet. Throughout this video we’ll explain 10 amazing interesting facts about the deep sea.
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Featuring…. Nobody knows where it begins - The ‘deep-sea’ is a contested term, lacking a single exact definition. For some it refers to the any part of the ocean where scary, odd and downright bizarre creatures live. For others, it’s a descriptive definition of specific ocean depths. Credit: http://linkbun.ch/04fay - Deep sea creatures are purposefully incredibly diverse. - Species from the deep may look like they’ve evolved in strange ways just to freak us out, but in fact they’ve evolved that way for specific survival purposes. For instance, to take advantage of the lack of light, most animals are transparent or red, a colour which few creatures can detect and is camouflaging in the darkness. Credit: http://linkbun.ch/04f2h - Exploring the deep is tremendously testing - An obvious fact, but one you probably haven’t seriously thought about. Part of the reason why it’s taken us so long to explore is because only recently have we created new generations of incredibly sophisticated underwater vehicles that are able to venture so deep. Credit: http://linkbun.ch/04f2i - Only three people have ever been to the deep sea - Due to the previously mentioned extremities, the deep sea may be the final frontier of exploration. Many more people have then been into space than to the deep sea. Like seriously, a loaaad more. Over 500 people have been into space, whereas only 3 people have ever ventured over 1000 fathoms into the depth of our oceans. Credit: http://linkbun.ch/04f2j - New species are being discovered daily - Since it’s largely unexplored, each time a vehicle is sent into the deep, it’s highly likely to unearth a new discovery. Over a recent year-long period the World Register of Marine Species reported discovering 1451 new marine species, of which many were found to be from the deep sea. Credit: http://linkbun.ch/04f2k - It’s a giant’s playground - The term Deep-sea gigantism exists in zoology for a reason. It refers to the tendency for deep-sea dwelling animals to be larger in size than their shallower-water relatives. We're not sure whether it comes about as a result of adaptation for scarce resources, greater pressure, or for other reasons. Credit: http://linkbun.ch/04f2l - Some amazing ecosystems exist on the ocean floor - In 1977 a deep-sea research expedition made history as they found hydrothermal vents releasing mineral rich water at the bottom of the ocean. Credit: http://linkbun.ch/04f2m - Geothermal vents aren’t the only thriving ecosystems on the ocean floor - Lush Deep-water coral gardens of various sizes, colours and shapes are able to survive in the Icy cold and extremely dim waters of up to 6000m (20,000 ft) below the ocean’s surface. In fact, scientists have discovered nearly as many species of deep-sea corals as shallow-water species. Unlike shallow-water corals, deep-sea corals don’t need sunlight but rather obtain the energy and nutrients they need to survive by trapping tiny organisms in passing currents. Credit: http://linkbun.ch/04f2n - The deep-sea may solve many of our problems - Some organisms that live in deep-sea coral habitats and the deep sea in general produce chemicals with enormous potential for future medicinal or commercial products such as pharmaceuticals, enzymes, pesticides or cosmetics. Credit: http://linkbun.ch/04f2o - The sea floor is a barren land - Put all your thoughts of geothermal vents and deep-sea coral reefs aside because the vast majority of the seafloor is featureless mud. On the face of it, it’s pretty similar to the empty expanses of outer space, but in space you can see everything using telescopes. Credit: http://linkbun.ch/04f2p
Music Credit: “Open Sea Morning” by Puddle of Infinity, From the Youtube Audio Library

.5 Deep Sea Creatures Faced By Divers!
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In recent years, advances in technology have seen more and more videos appear containing amazing footage of divers swimming with all manner of creatures never before seen. You won’t believe your eyes when watching this list of 5 Deep Sea Creatures Faced By Divers. Before we begin, make sure you hit that subscribe button to get notified every day for more amazing content! With this being said, let’s begin!
5. Giant Pyrosome
4.Giant Sunfish
3.Goliath Grouper attacks Diver
2. ??
1. ????
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The Ocean is a deep and scary world that is completely removed from most of our lives. In this video I explore just how deep the ocean actually is while discussing some of the strange life down there... and other just plain weird and odd things about the ocean. Feel free to leave any comments and share what you found interesting, or anything else you think that I should have added!
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Song used is called "Something Wicked" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zuw_O5MU5CE
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Come join Greg Foot on a scientific adventure diving down into the deep dark ocean! Starting on the deck of the 'Baseline Explorer', you’ll be lifted out into the waves, you’ll be cleared to dive, then you'll break the surface and head down, further and further, until you reach the side of an underwater volcano 250m under the surface, in the Twilight Zone just off the coast of Bermuda!
Your guide is Greg Foot - the Science Guy on Blue Peter and popular host of the YouTube Channel BBC Earth Lab [and lots of other stuff on YouTube, TV, Radio and Stage - More about Greg at www.gregfoot.com].
Greg’s drive was part of ocean charity Nekton's mission to deliver the XL Catlin Deep Ocean Survey. Nekton’s mission is to explore and research the ocean, the planet’s most critical, yet least explored, frontier. More info at www.nektonmission.org
Huge thanks to Nekton, XL Catlin, Project Baseline, Triton Submersibles, Global Underwater Explorers and all the crew on the Baseline Explorer.
Shot & edited by Greg Foot. Additional footage courtesy of Nekton / XL Catlin Deep Ocean Survey. Thanks also to Alex4D.

We created this video in celebration of the second annual International Polychaete Day (July 1, 2016). It highlights polychaete worms with special adaptations enabling them to survive in extreme environments on the deep seafloor, such as decaying whale skeletons and hydrothermal vents. Some of these worms can tolerate water temperatures up to 176 degrees Fahrenheit!
Video editing/script: Kyra Schlining
Narration: Shannon Johnson Williams
Music: Jaracanda.caf (Apple Inc.)
Production support: Nancy Jacobsen Stout, Lonny Lundsten, Susan von Thun, Linda Kuhnz, Shannon Johnson Williams, and Karen Osborn
Special thanks to the Monterey Bay Aquarium for use of the chemosynthesis graphic.
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We know more about the surface of our moon, than we do of the bottoms of our oceans.
To date, we have managed to explore a mere five percent of the floors of Earth’s oceans.
Much remains to be learned, and indeed explored.
Unimaginable mysteries, treasures, and the possible odd sea monster, could all still be laying deep within the blackness, irretrievable, and thus, undiscovered.
Our oceans are the lifeblood of the planet, covering more than 70 percent of its surface.
Responsible for the driving forces behind weather systems, the regulation of global seasonal temperatures, and ultimately, supporting all living organisms in one way or another.
Just what could be laying upon our ocean floors?
Lost relics from a bygone era?
Possible crashed, ancient alien craft?...
Indeed, we have already covered the enigmatic Eltanin antenna, which was discovered resting deep upon the Antarctic sea bed, found some decades ago.
Yet what else could be lurking down there?
Just waiting to be discovered…
It seems fortunately, that an ROV, a Remote Operated Vehicle, managed and controlled by the Olympic Challenger, may have managed to give us another glimpse at one of these utterly perplexing structures, resting deep within our oceans.
Recorded on September 11th, 2010, it is still unknown just what this object could be, possibly ancient? Seemingly installed, sunk into the ocean floor at a considerable depth.
Curiously, the recent event unfolded during a live-feed broadcast, and for some reason, as soon as the ROV came into visual contact with this most peculiar of objects, or indeed possible structure, the crew controlling the machine, mysteriously decided to manoeuvre the ROV away, out of view of the object, and then quickly accelerated away…
The small fragment of footage that was seen however, indicated that the number of right angles within the structures form, and indeed its overall appearance, makes it seem unlikely to have had natural origins.
Fortunately, a few people who witnessed the live exploration broadcast, managed to record the event, and subsequently leak the footage to the public, so we fortunately we do have video evidence of the discovery taking place.
However, due to the company’s reluctance to discuss, or even acknowledge the event, not much regarding the discovery has been attained.
Just what this thing was, may remain a mystery, or at least kept secret, hidden away from most of the public domain.
A year ago, we shared with you the leaked state department emails, files, and documents - Made available to the public by way of wiki-leaks founder Julian Assange, which pertained to the united states governments full awareness of a UFO crash site near the populate northern town of Igloolik, Northern Canada, very near to the borders of Greenland….
This object subsequently sinking to a great depth, it then began to emit a mysterious ping, a possible distress beacon, a sound, which for some time began to annoy a large number of the locals.
Since this event a few years ago, the strange ping has seemingly disappeared, and the fate of its source remains a mystery.
An unfortunate fate which may also be bestowed upon this most recent, and intriguing of discoveries made by the Olympic challenger.
Yet thankfully the world got to see it first.
http://conspiraciones1040.blogspot.com/2012/04/quien-instalado-este-objeto-en-el-fondo.html
http://www.shipspotting.com/gallery/photo.php?lid=2016814
https://www.animalplanet.com/

Our knowledge of the ocean has increased tremendously with the advent of new technologies. How deep-sea animals can exist in places where no food is produced has long been a mystery. The seafloor in the abyss off the coast of California was studied for 24 years, and these investigations are contributing to our understanding about how conditions at the surface of the ocean control deep-living biological communities.
Video producer: Linda Kuhnz
Script and narration: Linda Kuhnz
Production support: Lonny Lundsten, Kyra Schlining, Nancy Jacobsen Stout
Music: Cool Raindrops, composed by Score Studio
Original journal articles:
Kuhnz, L.A., H.A. Ruhl, C.L. Huffard, K.L. Smith. 2014. Rapid changes and long-term cycles in the benthic megafaunal community observed over 24 years in the abyssal northeast Pacific. Progress in Oceanography http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S007966111400055X
Smith Jr, K. L., A. D. Sherman, C. L. Huffard, P. R. McGill, R. Henthorn, S. Von Thun, H. A. Ruhl, M. Kahru, and M. D. Ohman. 2014. Large salp bloom export from the upper ocean and benthic community response in the abyssal northeast Pacific: Day to week resolution. Limnol. Oceanogr 59; 745-757. http://www.aslo.org/lo/toc/vol_59/issue_3/0745.html

Methane is a harmful greenhouse gas known to be a major contributor to global warming and climate change. Off the Eastern coast of the United States, deep in the Atlantic Ocean, researchers have discovered hundreds of vents that they think are leaking methane gas.
Methane is a harmful greenhouse gas known to be a major contributor to global warming and climate change.
Off the Eastern coast of the United States, deep in the Atlantic Ocean researchers have discovered hundreds of vents that they think are leaking methane gas.
The study found 570 gas vents that were identified stretching between the states of North Carolina and Massachusetts.
According to Professor Adam Skarke from Mississippi State University, who led the study: "The methane is dissolving into the ocean at depths of hundreds of metres and being oxidised to CO2. But it is important to say we simply don't have any evidence in this paper to suggest that any carbon coming from these seeps is entering the atmosphere."
One effect of climate change is rising ocean temperatures, which some researchers think might be causing the vents to open.
Estimates say that there might be up to 30 thousand of these kinds of vents in oceans around the world.
Unique kinds of life forms have been found living near the vents, which the researchers say is a significant find because of the amount of biodiversity that is able to exist there.

In the past 25 years, the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute has found trash up to 13,000 feet deep and 300 miles offshore in waters off of central and southern California, the Pacific Northwest, Hawaii and the Gulf of California.

Mr. Lima discusses features of the ocean floor associated with the deep-ocean basins (Abyssal Plains, Guyots, Seamoutns, Abyssal Hills, Mid-Ocean Ridges, Trenches), as well as other ocean features such as Atolls, Barrier Islands, and Island Arcs
He also briefly describes oceanic topographic maps.

Want more natural history and wildlife videos? Visit the official BBC Earth channel: http://bit.ly/BBCEarthWW
BBC Earth
The BBC Earth YouTube channel is home to over 50 years-worth of the best animal videos from the BBC archive. With three new videos released every week there’s something for all nature loves from astounding animal behaviour to beautiful imagery. Click here to find our more: http://bit.ly/BBCEarthWW
Alistair Fothergill, presenter of BBC wildlife show The Abyss, has a fantastic opportunity to see some of the rare animals that live on the sea floor in this amazing sea life video. Includes brilliant footage of the Grenadier fish, the Caimira fish and the Dumbo Octopus.

Explore the ocean seafloor with Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory Global Multi-Resolution Topography (GMRT) Synthesis covering half of all of the ocean that has ever been mapped, an area larger than North America. You can also view new data of Cordell Bank and the Gulf of the Farallones off of the California coast from California State University Monterey Bay (CSUMB) along with a beautiful 50 meter synthesis of the Hawaiian Islands from the University of Hawai'i at Manoa's School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology (UHM-SOEST).

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Antarctica, one of the world’s most mysterious continents, home to one of the largest and driest deserts on the planet, covering an area of around 5 and a half million square miles.
If there was anywhere on earth where crashed, preserved, ancient alien technologies could still be found, it would be here.
An untouched landscape which may in all possibility be the final resting place of as yet, un-retrieved relics, which have been stranded there to this day.
The deep sea which surrounds Antarctic for example, are some of the most difficult and inhospitable environments to explore anywhere.
Far away from the modern world, deep within the frigid, pitch black waters of this massive chunk of ice, where our next discovery was miraculously made.
An out of place artefact which is still resting at the bottom of this sea.
Known as the Eltanin Antenna, if it wasn’t for the brute strength of the nearly 2000 tonne ice breaking vessel known as the Eltanin, we may never have found it.
Initially a US Navy as a cargo-carrying icebreaker, in 1962, she was reclassified as an Oceanographic Research Ship, and became the world's first dedicated Antarctic research vessel.
On the 29th of August 1964, while collecting sample cores and photographing the seabed west of Cape Horn, the Eltanin took the first known photograph of the antenna at a depth of nearly 4000 metres.
The first public mention of the unusual object would not surface for several months, a news item which appeared in the New Zealand Herald on 5 December 1964, under the heading "Puzzle Picture From the Sea Bed" would briefly disclose the discover, yet any further exploratory missions, if indeed there has been any, have been operating in secret.
Similar to the Baltic sea anomaly, yet positioned at a far deeper depth, in an extremely remote, cold, and lonely part of our world, it too shows all the hallmarks of an artificially created object, the question is, what could it be?
And more importantly, whats was, or is, its function? How was it placed where it is?
In 1968, author Brad Steiger wrote an article for Saga magazine in which he claimed that the Eltanin had in fact photographed "an astonishing piece of machinery... very much like the cross between a TV antenna and a telemetry antenna".
It is interesting to note that the black knight satellite, an anomalous object which is in a polar orbit, has been declared by numerous investigators throughout history, as an artificial “alien satellite”, and with what appears to be an enormous alien antenna resting on the Antarctic sea floor, is it possible that the two are connected?
Or possibly, in communication with each other?
In 2003 Tom DeMary, a researcher in underwater acoustics, contacted oceanographer A. F. Amos, a member of the Eltaninins crew the 1960s, in an effort to debunk any theory involving artificial design.
In turn Amos referred DeMary to the 1971 book “The Face of the Deep” by Bruce C. Heezen and Charles D. Hollister.
It seems Hollister had already attempted to identify the mysterious object as a carnivorous sea sponge. However, these attempts to discredit any unusual hypothesis, was solely based on the same photographs we are privileged to, further photographic exploration of the object, if undertaken, has been done in complete isolation from the public.
What is the Eltanin antenna?
A mere sea sponge?
An actual alien antenna?
Whatever it is, it seems certain fields of study would like you to believe its natural, regardless of whether confirmation of such claims was made, we always find this highly compelling.
Music Mystery Train and Alexander Hoff
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eltanin_Antenna

April 21, 2011 — Scientists use cameras and sonar near the U.S. Virgin Islands to "see" the seafloor and find out how fish and other sea life use the underwater habitats, which include coral reefs and sea grasses.
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Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 is likely resting on the floor of one of the least-mapped sections of the ocean, according to officials. Searchers hope the missing plane didn't end up on one known feature called the Broken Ridge. Jason Bellini reports.
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The Ocean is a pretty scary place and over the years many mysterious sounds have been recorded from deep down that to this day have no solid explanation. Here are five of those that are not only creepy and eerie but could also be a glimpse of the incredible undiscovered creatures of the deep sea.
The Bloop, Upsweep, the Train, Julia and Slow down natural event or undiscovered sea monsters?
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On April 28th, 2000 Israeli-Russian diving instructor Yuri Lipski, sank over 300 feet to while diving in the Blue Hole, off the coast of Egypt in the Red Sea. When his body was retrieved, it was discovered that Yuri was wearing a helmet camera and had recorded his final moments on tape...

Having a good relationship with others.
Seasons.
To dream of the seasons signify a passage of time and the phases and periods in your life. In particular, if the seasons are changing rapidly through your dream, then it suggest that you are undergoing an important transformation and deep spiritual development in your life. Consider the specific season for additional meaning.
Seat.
Seatbelt.
To wear a seatbelt in your dream suggests that you need to work on controlling your emotions. Try to stay compose and do not fall apart in any situation.
To dream that you are having trouble putting on your seatbelt indicates that you are worried about what is ahead in your future.
Seaweed.

To see seaweed in your dream suggests that you need to rely on your intuition and trust your instincts.
To dream that you or someone has a secret represents hidden power. It suggests that something is emerging from your subconscious.
To dream that your secret is revealed signifies fear of being exposed for who you really are. It may also indicate pressure of keeping a waking secret that you are desperate to let out. Alternatively, the secret is analogous to some subconscious material that needs to be confronted or addressed.
Secret Admirer.
To dream that you have a secret admirer suggests that there are some unknown aspects of yourself that you need to find out about and incorporate into your character. Alternatively, the dream may be drawing your attention to someone who is interested in you. Or perhaps the dream is telling you to be more aware of your surroundings.
To dream that someone is your Secret Santa signifies the spirit of giving. It is about doing something good without having any expectations in return.
Secretary.
To see or dream that you are a secretary indicates that you need to more order and organization in your life. Dont be afraid to ask for help when you need it.
Sect.